July 2008 Cub Scout Roundtable Issue |
Volume
14, Issue
12
August 2008 Theme |
Theme:
S'MORE SUMMER FUN
Webelos:
Forester & Naturalist
Tiger Cub
Activities |
TIGERS
Not sure how many Tigers anyone
has at this point in time. Last year's Tigers should have been promoted to Wolf
in June. Our spring recruitment only had one kindergartener sign up, so we are
counting on the Fall. Anyway, here are some things for Tigers to do. In the
September issue (October's theme) I will begin a series on each of the
Achievements. CD
The year is
over and it’s a great time to reflect on your accomplishments. Reviewing the
requirements for the National Den Award would be a good thing to do during the
summer so you can improve on your program if it was not achieved. Learning new
games and activities for the upcoming year would be helpful if the ones you
typically use did not hold their interest.
Wax Paper Sun Catchers
Capital Area Council
ü
Collect leaves,
flowers, weeds and press them for a few days before the Tiger meeting in a large
phone book.
ü
Tigers place leaves,
flowers etc. on a sheet of waxed paper (about 12" square).
ü
The Tigers then make
crayon shavings with an inexpensive plastic pencil sharpener.
ü
They sprinkle a few
wax shavings between the flowers and leaves.
ü
Cover the wax paper
with another sheet of wax paper.
ü
The DEN LEADER (or
other Adult) then uses an iron on medium setting to fuse the two pieces of wax
paper together and melt the crayon shavings (works best if you put a piece of
brown paper sack under the bottom piece of wax paper and another piece of the
brown paper sack between the top piece of wax paper and then iron.)
Bubble Fun
Capital Area Council
Blow a soap
bubble and watch it float in the air.
Blow gently
to keep it aloft without popping it.
Have a
contest to see who can keep a bubble in the air longest, or how far you can blow
your bubble before it bursts.
Basic Bubble Solution
1 cup Joy or
Dawn
3-4
Tablespoons glycerin (optional, available at drugstore)
10 cups clean
cold water (up to 50% more on dry days)
Directions
In a clean
pail, mix the ingredients well.
Do not stir
too much, you don't want froth on the top.
Leave it
overnight if you have time.
You don't
have to have glycerin but it makes the bubbles last longer and you get larger
without breaking.
Giant Bubble Wand
Thread the
string through both of the straws and knot the ends.
Lay the
straws and string down in the BUBBLE SOLUTION.
Gently lift
up the straws, one in each hand.
Spread the
straws apart as you lift, and a giant bubble will form.
Wave your
arms across in the air, and it will be set free, to float up, up, and away!
Assorted Wands
Twist thin
wire into fun shapes.
Use beads for
handles for smaller wands.
Weather Rocks
Capital Area Council
Collect a
quantity of "weather" rocks to pass out to every family at the pack meeting.
Photocopy the
following directions and sandwich between layers of clear contact paper.
Give one with
each rock.
Make a big
deal out of this wonderful present your den is giving away.
Weather Rock Instructions
1.
For best
results, place your weather rock outside:
2.
If you rock is
wet…it's raining.
3.
If your rock is
white…it's snowing.
4.
If your rock is
moving…it's really windy.
5.
If your rock is
stiff…it's freezing.
6.
If your rock is
gone…sorry, you've been ripped off!
Bees And Butterflies
Capital Area Council
·
The next time your
den is anyplace where there are a lot of flowers, pretend that all of you are
bees and butterflies.
·
Zigzag from one
flower to another.
·
Look at a blossom
from the insect point of view.
·
Stick your finger
down into the blossom to find the pollen.
·
How would you get to
it if you were an insect?
·
Feel the pollen and
smell it.
·
Be careful that you
don’t run into a real bee!
Listening Post
Capital Area Council
ü
Find a spot just for
you within sight of your leader and listen carefully for two minutes.
ü
Then come together
and tell each other what you heard.
ü
How many sounds did
you hear?
ü
Could you tune out
sounds from the world of people?
Sport Stacking
Have you
heard of one of the newest sports – Sport Stacking. Founded in 1995 and
formally known as cup stacking, this sport can be completed by individuals or as
teams. Current world records are set by 13 and 14 year olds.
Participants
of sport stacking upstack and downstack cups in pre-determined sequences,
competing against the clock or another player. Sequences are usually pyramids of
three, six, or ten cups. Proponents of the sport say participants learn
teamwork, cooperation, ambidexterity, and hand-eye coordination.
There are four
main types of stacks in competition. All stacks can be made from left-to-right
or right-to-left (individual preference), but the same direction must be
maintained for both "up stacking" (setting the cups into pyramids) and "down
stacking" (unstacking the pyramids and returning them to their nested position).
3 - 3 – 3
Uses 9 cups.
Cups start in three nested stacks of 3. The stacker must create three pyramids
of 3 cups each and then down stack the cups back into nested stacks of 3 in the
order that they were upstacked.
3 - 6 – 3
Uses 12 cups. The
stacker must create three pyramids made up of three cups on the left, six cups
in the center, and three cups on the right (3-6-3), then down stack the cups in
the order that they were upstacked into their original position. Also used as
the first transition of the Cycle Stack.
6 – 6
Uses 12 cups. The
stacker must create pyramids of 6 cups on the left and 6 on the right and then
down stack both of them to create one pile of cups. This stack is only used
competitively as the second transition in the Cycle Stack.
1 - 10 – 1
Uses 12 cups. The
stacker begins with a single downstacked pile. He/she must take two cups off the
top, turn one upside-down (stacker's choice), then upstack the remaining ten.
The stacker must then tap the opposite sides of the single cups and take down
the ten stack into a downstacked 3-6-3. This stack is only used competitively as
the third transition of the
Cycle Stack
The Cycle Stack
The most complicated stack is called the Cycle Stack. It involves a sequence
which includes, in order: a 3-6-3 stack, a 6-6 stack, and a 1-10-1 stack,
finishing in a down stacked 3-6-3.
Check out
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sport_stacking
or
http://www.worldsportstackingassociation.org/
to learn more
about the sport and to watch world record holders compete. You’ll be amazed!
Materials found in Baloo's Bugle may be used by Scouters for Scouting activities provided that Baloo's Bugle and the original contributors are cited as the source of the material. |
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